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2025-09-30-accounts

CORNWALL CLIMATE CARE ANNUAL REPORT 2024 - 2025

FACTS • INSPIRATION • EDUCATION Documenting Cornwall’s changing climate – and the inspirational people and projects working to tackle it

2024-2025 IN NUMBERS

WE FILMED 1 NEW DOCUMENTARY

WE HOSTED 20 CINEMA & OTHER SCREENINGS

WE TOOK PART IN ALONGSIDE Q&AS ACROSS 29 60 INVITED EXPERT SCREENINGS & PANELLISTS FESTIVALS

COMMUNITY ORGANISATIONS HOSTED

31

OVER

2,500

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WE SPOKE AT
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7

WE DELIVERED 166 WORKSHOPS TO 4,885

SCREENINGS OF OUR FILMS

PEOPLE ATTENDED LIVE SCREENINGS OF OUR FILMS

CONFERENCES AND STUDENTS AT 58 SCHOOLS OTHER EVENTS ACROSS CORNWALL & DEVON

WE WON

[2]

AWARDS

WE HOSTED

1

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INTERN
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VOLUNTEERS DONATED ALMOST OVER 1,000 £34,283 HOURS OF TIME TO TOTAL VALUE OF VOLUNTARY OUR CHARITY CONTRIBUTIONS

TO DATE...

WE HAVE MADE NINE DOCUMENTARIES

OUR FILMS HAVE BEEN WATCHED OVER 90,000 TIMES ONLINE

WE HAVE RECEIVED ONE LETTER PRAISING OUR FILMS FROM SIR DAVID ATTENBOROUGH WE HAVE REACHED OVER 7,500 VIEWERS AT LIVE EVENTS

WE HAVE DELIVERED WORKSHOPS TO OVER 8,400 YOUNG PEOPLE

VIEWERS RATE OUR FILMS ON AVERAGE AT 9.5 OUT OF 10

VIEWERS SAY OUR FILMS MAKE THEM FEEL

‘POSITIVE’ ‘INSPIRED’ AND ‘KEEN TO LEARN MORE’

The trustees of the Cornwall Climate Care charity hereby present their annual report and accounts for the year ended 30th September 2025.

GOVERNANCE & PURPOSE

Cornwall Climate Care (CCC) operates under a Trust Deed dated 22 September 2020 and registered by the Charity Commissioners for England and Wales, which includes regulations for the appointment of trustees.

The Cornwall Climate Care trustees are responsible for the overall management and control of the charity and must hold ordinary meetings at least twice a year, with additional informal meetings called as necessary. All trustees give their time freely, without remuneration.

The charitable purpose of Cornwall Climate Care is to advance public education, primarily through the production of a series of themed documentaries called Cornwall’s Climate Stories, focused on the impact of and solutions to climate change in Cornwall.

Cornwall’s Climate Stories is a series of documentary films looking at how climate change is affecting every aspect of our lives in Cornwall, from health to fishing, energy to water, farming to transport.

The films are non-political, non-sensationalist and feature expert research from local institutions as well as inspiring stories about the real people working to make a positive difference.

Each film is narrated not by a professional presenter, but by a different local person who is relevant to and passionate about the topic in question.

Aside from our in-house team, the Cornwall’s Climate Stories films are made with the support and contributions of many local videographers, researchers, video and audio editors and musicians.

We also offer opportunities for film students and young people to assist us with gathering footage, research, and other tasks.

THE TEAM

Our core staff team over the year were:

CLAIRE WALLERSTEIN

charity director and series producer

BRYONY STOKES

film director

HAYLEY HILL education coordinator

JEMMA KNOWLES

distribution and outreach

KRAI PEARSON social media and marketing manager

MEG ROBERTS

social media and marketing manager

GYPSIE BE ~~R~~ RY net zero intern

JO BENNETTS admin and bookkeeping

TEAM EVOLUTION

Five years after founding the charity, Claire is moving on to pastures new.

CLAIRE WALLERSTEIN

current charity director

With the trustees being unanimous in their aim for Cornwall Climate Care to continue making an impact five years from now, a recruitment campaign was launched this year to find a fresh pair of

hands to lead the charity in the next phase in its growth and development.

After receiving over 20 applications and interviewing six brilliant candidates, the person ultimately selected to take on the charity director role was Nicola Nuttall, who will start progressively taking over from Claire in November 2025.

Nicola brings a wealth of experience in fundraising, charity management and operational governance - supporting organisations as they navigate complex times, seek transformational strategies and plan for the future.

Against the global context of growing climate misinformation and backlash against climate action – as well as changes in the ways that people are consuming and engaging with content today – these are undeniably challenging times, but also huge opportunities to take our work in fresh directions.

NICOLA NUTTALL

charity director from November 2025

We can’t wait to see what the charity will achieve under Nicola’s leadership!

TRUSTEES

Cornwall Climate Care’s trustees represent a broad variety of skills and experience to help support and enhance the work of the charity. Ursula Stevenson, Katherine Moore and Natalie Hart all stepped down over the course of the financial year – we are incredibly grateful to each of them for the contributions and support.

ALEX HUKE

one of our founding trustees and Head of Environment and Clean Growth at the University of Exeter

NATALIE FREY

Grants Associate with Global Greengrants Fund

LOUISE FOX

director of the MorMedia Charity and Cornwall Film Festival

HARRISON WOOD

environmental and effective altruism video producer

URSULA STEVENSON

environmental consultant & member of the Institute of Environmental Management & Assessment

KATHERINE MOORE

sustainable lifestyle coach and environmental consultant

NATALIE HART

author, researcher and communications advisor working with Communications Inc, focusing on marine environmental campaigns

A heartfelt thank you to all of our trustees, those who left us this year and those who remain.

We will be recruiting new trustees in early 2026. If you are interested in finding out more, please read the ‘About Us’ section of our website cornwallclimate.org, drop us a line and watch out for our calls for trustees in the new year.

OUR AIMS AND OBJECTIVES

OUR KEY OBJECTIVES FOR THE YEAR WERE TO:

Release and promote our film #ClimateScam? for maximum possible impact to help counter the rising narrative of climate denial and misinformation

Support public screenings of our films and endeavour to extend the reach and impact of our existing content beyond the Cornish border

Deliver educational workshops in primary and secondary schools and non-school settings to deepen youth engagement with the climate crisis across the curriculum

Create links with and collaborate with researchers, other organisations and campaign groups in the UK and beyond to make a meaningful contribution to global action on the climate and ecological crises

RELEASE OF #CLIMATESCAM?

Our most important activity in the year was the release of our eighth documentary, #ClimateScam? , focusing on climate misinformation and conspiracy theories. It premiered at the Cornwall Film Festival in Falmouth.

We organised local screenings in Truro, Plymouth, Penzance, Calstock, and Kingsand, accompanied by engaging Q&A discussions. In Falmouth and Truro, we were pleased to have Gillian Burke, former BBC Springwatch presenter and host of the podcast If I Ruled the World , join our panel.

“JAZ, THE BRILLIANT PRESENTER OF #CLIMATESCAM?, ASKS THE RIGHT QUESTIONS TO THE RIGHT PEOPLE, SHINING A POWERFUL LIGHT ON THE DISINFORMATION SURROUNDING THE CLIMATE CRISIS.”

Damian Carrington, Guardian Environment Editor

“CONFRONTING THE CAUSES AND IMPACT OF CLIMATE MISINFORMATION HEAD-ON IS ESSENTIAL, THE MORE VOICES AND PERSPECTIVES IN THE CONVERSATION THE BETTER. WE SIMPLY CANNOT AFFORD TO IGNORE THIS URGENT ISSUE, & #CLIMATESCAM? IS A VITAL CALL TO ACTION FOR US AL ~~L~~ Peter Lefort, Head of Green Futures Network, Exeter University

N ~~A~~ TIONWIDE SCREENINGS AND IMPACT

We were thrilled to strengthen our partnership with Picturehouse cinemas through their Green Screen strand.

We created a triple bill, combining #ClimateScam? with Plan Z: From lab coats to handcuffs by Voice Media – documenting scientists risking their liberty by turning to activism to make politicians act on their warnings – and Climate Anxiety by Cambridge Moviemakers, in which young people, their parents and therapists discuss their experiences of climate anxiety.

Picturehouse’s Felicity Beckett informed us that these screenings (some of them total sell-outs) – in Bath, Finsbury Park (London), Norwich, York, Brighton and Brixton – were the chain’s most successful Green Screen events to date!

NATIONWIDE SCREENINGS AND IMPACT

Whilst the Picturehouse screenings helped us increase our nationwide reach, we also held additional #ClimateScam? events well beyond the Tamar at:

While the national cinema screenings were ongoing, we trialled a pay-per-view option for supporters to watch the film online as an exclusive option prior to its general free release. We also made use of additional content filmed during our interviews with climate scientists, sceptics and people on the streets – using this to create a series of short, mythbusting films, which are available on our Youtube channel.

BY BLENDING SCIENCE WITH A HEARTFELT EXPLORATION OF HUMAN BEHAVIOUR, #CLIMATESCAM? INSPIRES US TO ENGAGE CRITICALLY WITH THE NARRATIVES WE ENCOUNTER - & DO SO WITH EMPATHY. Alex Edwards, climate and energy systems PhD student

#CLIMATESCAM? IS A FASCINATING FILM, REALLY ILLUMINATING. IT SHOWS THAT NOT ONLY DO WE HAVE TO FIGHT CLIMATE BREAKDOWN, WE HAVE TO FIGHT THOSE PEOPLE WHO ARE TELLING OTHERS THAT IT DOESN’T EXIST. A CRITICAL ASPECT OF THE CLI ~~MA~~ TE EMERGENCY AND HOW WE TACKLE I ~~T~~ .” Professor Bill McGuire, author of Hothouse Earth

INDEPENDENT SCREENINGS

With increasing awareness that the library of content we have produced is absolutely unique, we created materials for groups and organisations to host their own screening and discussion events, throughout the UK and beyond without requiring one of our team to take part.

Over the past year, independent screening requests increased by 30%, with over 40% occurring outside Cornwall in various locations including Devon, London, Wales, Durham, Surrey, Wiltshire, Dorset, Kent and Hertfordshire.

Films were shown by the following organisations and community groups:

“THE CORNWALL CLIMATE CARE STORIES ARE TOLD BY EVERYDAY PEOPLE AND ARE EVERYONE'S STORIES; THEY ARE ENTERTAINING, FULL OF JOY, CONNECTION, BRAVERY, BEAUTY AND ARE BEACONS OF HOPE FOR US ALL.” Felicity Beckett, Head of Green Agenda, Picturehouse Cinemas

WE ATTENDED SCREENINGS OF:

#ClimateScam? plus Q&A at a special brunch event for the Cornwall Chamber of Commerce

#ClimateScam? + Q&A at the Green Gathering Festival (Chepstow) Power to the People + Q&A at the Armchair Adventure Festival (Mt Edgcumbe)

Power to the People at the University of Exeter welcome event for Master’s students (Cornwall campus)

#ClimateScam? at Frome International Climate Film Festival (official selection)

Under the Surface and L iving on the Edge plus Q&A at the Looe ‘We Are of this Place’ Festival

Under the Surface plus Q&A at The Rock Pool Project Community Bioblitz Festival at Porthpean

ClimateScam? and Plenty More Fish? + Q&A at Plymouth’s The Box Living on the Edge for the National Trust at the Bowgie Inn, Crantock #ClimateScam? at Newquay Orchard

With Q&A at the Penlee House Gallery in Penzance, as part of their exhibition ‘The Shape of Things: Our Place in a Changing Climate’

#ClimateScam? for foundation year students at Plymouth University

#ClimateScam? + Q&A for Master’s students at the Eden Project

#ClimateScam? + Q&A for Saltash Environmental Action

Q&A with our trustee Harrison Wood in Penryn by Mid Cornwall Climate & Eco Hub

Living on the Edge and #ClimateScam? + Q&A in Mevagissey

INDEPENDENT SCREENINGS

Our screening packs contain comprehensive information on how to run and promote a screening, including guided discussion materials to enable fruitful audience conversations and stimulate ideas around what communities and individuals can do to help.

We charge a small licence fee for groups wishing to run screenings, in an effort to make our future work more financially sustainable.

We were able to engage directly and indirectly with several thousand people across Cornwall and beyond, through our screenings, events and collaborations with third parties, receiving £7,446.77 from licences and ticket sales.

As well as being freely available to watch on our own website and YouTube channel, our films are available on the Waterbear network (waterbear.com), a streaming site dedicated to environmental programming, giving our films international reach.

Next year we aim to focus more proactively on reaching out to potentially interested groups further afield around the country.

Volunteer Nina Shekhdar is kindly helping us to build up a database of nationwide community organisations so that we can proactively offer our independent screenings package.

We are keen to increase our volunteer base, so if you have relevant skills or a particular interest in any area of our work, please contact cornwallclimate@gmail.com.

OTHER EVENTS

Aside from film screenings, we also took part in or ran a range of other events throughout the year:

Anthropy at the Eden Project – the event bringing together hundreds of the country’s most inspiring and influential thought leaders. It was a great opportunity to listen to fresh ideas and make new contacts.

Facilitation of the Q&A session ‘Making it Work – On the Farm’ at Sustainable Food Cornwall’s ‘Good Food Summit’ at Nancarrow Farm.

Session contribution at the WWF event ‘Cornwall’s Triple Challenge: Climate, Nature and Food’ in Lostwithiel, alongside SE Cornwall MP Anna Gelderd and sustainable food sector speakers.

Participation in the incredibly inspirational ‘How to Fall in Love with the Future: Imagination Catalyst’ workshop by Rob Hopkins, founder of the Transition Movement, at Plymouth University.

Attendance at ‘People, Places and Procedures - Lessons from the St Ives mCDR experience’, a lesson-learning event following the proposed ‘ocean acidification’ geoengineering experiments by Canadian company Planetary Tech.

Talk given to Maker with Rame Women’s Institute.

Presentation of #ClimateScam? to scientists and activists at the Exeter Climate Forum (run-up to COP30) conference.

REPORTS AND IMPACT

NET ZERO INTERN

For several years, we have collected feedback from live and online audiences through our survey. Our films and events have received an impressive average score of 9.5 out of 10, with viewers praising our balanced approach and describing their feelings as ‘inspired’, ‘positive’, and ‘keen to learn more’.

This year, we had the chance to explore the longer-term impact of our films on audiences, thanks to our Net Zero intern, Gypsie Berry, a Psychology graduate from the University of Plymouth. Her role, supported by the Entrepreneurial Futures Shared Prosperity Fund Project, involved designing and conducting surveys and focus groups to assess both immediate and lasting changes in attitudes and behaviours after watching three of our films ( #ClimateScam? , Hungry for Change , and Power to the People ).

“MY TIME AT CCC INSPIRED ME TO PURSUE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH FURTHER, MOTIVATING ME TO BEGIN AN MSC IN ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY. I AM DEEPLY GRATEFUL TO THE CCC TEAM FOR THE INVALUABLE EXPERIENCE!” Gypsie Berry - Net Zero Intern

Mentored by Gill Scott Anderson and trustees Natalie Frey and Katherine Moore, Gypsie’s work revealed statistically-significant shifts in attitudes and behavioural intentions, which persisted three months after screenings.

Attitudinal changes included greater hopefulness, determination, curiosity, and less agreement with the idea that it’s too late to act on climate change, as well as reduced trust in government. Longer-term behaviour changes involved switching to ethical banks and renewable energy, reducing meat consumption, choosing more plant-based foods, buying local or organic, and working to minimise food waste.

REACHING OUT BEYOND THE ECO-BUBBLE

Gypsie’s research revealed that, despite efforts to broaden our audience, the majority of viewers at our film events are still predominantly middle-class, educated women over 60 who are already environmentally conscious. This highlights the ongoing challenge of producing and delivering content in a way that reaches more diverse and less typical audiences.

Gypsie’s report made the following key recommendations:

Focus on engaging Tailor messages to younger, more diverse different demographics and less environmentally and provide clearer, active audiences for accessible pathways to increased impact on pro-environmental sustainable behaviours. action and political engagement. Keep addressing already engaged audiences, because these documentaries help reinforce sustainable behaviours.

We are grateful to the National Marine Aquarium in Plymouth, Plymouth Arts Cinema, Big Green Surf School, the Cornish Seal Sanctuary and Riverford for generously donating rewards to encourage participation in the surveys.

We thoroughly enjoyed working with Gypsie, and are pleased to share that because of this project, she has chosen to pursue a Master’s in Environmental Psychology at the University of Surrey!

YOUTH NATURE ENGAGEMENT REPORT

Gypsie also worked with us on a second project this year, producing ‘Stronger and Deeper – Boosting Youth Nature Engagement in Cornwall’, a threemonth scoping report for the Cornwall Wildlife Trust.

Together with Claire and Hayley, Gypsie collated information from over 150 youth survey responses, in-depth interviews and focus groups with young people aged 11 to 30, and discussions with schools, teachers, local environmental and youth groups, as well as young Trust staff. Interviews with national-level organisations also informed the report, focusing on best practice in youth engagement, co-design, and long-term nature connectedness.

We explored what is available in Cornwall for young people to connect with nature, as well as gaps and how CWT could best complement local efforts. The findings showed young people in Cornwall are energetic and creative, keen to get involved, but face barriers such as transport, finances, curriculum pressures and limited accessible opportunities.

The report ended with numerous recommendations, including boosting youth representation in CWT governance, targeting unengaged youth through gamified approaches, and creating a ‘Green Champions’ award scheme for young people’s nature protection work. More broadly, it suggested CWT could be an effective convenor to increase the impact of Cornish nature organisations working with youth. CWT are considering these recommendations, and we hope to collaborate with them in future to put some into action!

EDUCATION WORK

Climate change significantly impacts today's youth, yet it is minimally covered in the curriculum, appearing only at GCSE level in Science and Geography (an optional subject).

Our education coordinator, Hayley, delivers workshops based on the themes of our films to inspire young people, giving them hope and a feeling of agency. During this academic year, Hayley visited the highest number of schools yet – 47 primary and 11 secondary, reaching 4,885 pupils during 166 workshops.

There was an increase of 13 schools from last year, reaching over 1,200 more pupils! Over half the schools (31) had not hosted workshops before and many bookings were the result of school-to-school recommendations, attendance by Cornwall Climate Care staff at various events and inclusion in school Our education coordinator Hayley Hill delivers workshops based around the themes of our films that can inspire young people,mailings by Devon and Cornwall Councils. giving them hope and a feeling of agency.

Over the course of the year, Hayley delivered workshops to an incredible total of 3,596 students at 133 schools across Cornwall and Devon (2,718 primary school children at 100 schools and 878 secondary school students at 33 schools). The most popular topic was ‘Climate change and our oceans’ (52 workshops), followed by ‘Climate change and food systems’ (27 workshops) and ‘Climate change and energy’ (26 workshops). We delivered 12 bespoke workshops and whole school assemblies.

We currently fund these workshops through donations and our charity reserves, and are actively seeking financial support to keep them going. We are launching a Crowdfunder in February 2026 and will also be applying for

educational grants. This ye ~~ar, we invited~~ schools to make donations for workshops and we will continue to ask for donations in 2026. Seven schools held ‘w ~~ea~~ r green’ days this year, raising £664.

“PERFECTLY PITCHED TO THE AGE - EMPOWERING BUT NOT SHYING AWAY FROM THE TRICKINESS OF THE TOPIC” - TEACHER

EDUCATION WORK CONTINUED

Hayley contributed to Penlee House and Gallery’s ‘The Shape of Things: Our Place in a Changing Climate’ by running a workshop for local primary schools, connecting film clips to artworks to show how Cornwall is responding to climate change.

Hayley and Claire attended a networking and skills-building event for teachers at the Eden Project, organised by the Ministry of Eco Education. They shared details about Hayley’s workshops and encouraged sign-ups, also inviting participants to try our special quiz.

Claire took part in a fantastic Truro and Penwith College event organised by the Ministry of Eco Education, where #ClimateScam? was screened to a large group of students, including those from noneco courses. After the film, there was a Q&A with thoughtful questions. The documentary inspired three weeks of college content exploring misinformation and social media manipulation, with several thousand students viewing the film.

Hayley was invited to a whole school sustainability event at Haywards School in Crediton, Devon. She delivered a food systems workshop to all year groups alongside other local sustainability groups.

Jemma represented Cornwall Climate Care at the Power of 10 Climate Schools Eco Conference at the University of Exeter and also at the Beyond COP21 Symposium at Truro High School.

Claire attended a Climate Conference in Ladock, organised by Cornwall Council’s Education Business Partnership. The event aimed to help school leaders begin calculating their schools’ carbon footprint and develop Climate Action Plans, as recommended by the Department for Education (DfE), for implementation by end of 2025.

“DONE IN A POSITIVE WAY WITHOUT PUTTING PRESSURE ON STUDENTS (TO FIX CLIMATE CHANGE)” - TEACHER

AWARDS AND RECOGNITION

We were beyond honoured this year to receive two prestigious rewards in recognition of our work:

At the Cornwall Sustainability Awards, held at the National Maritime Museum in Falmouth, we received the Mark Duddridge award for ‘A Sustainable Vision for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly’.

It was wonderful to receive this award (ingeniously created from the recycled offcuts from production of post-mastectomy breast forms, made by Cornish company Boost!) alongside so many inspiring local companies, charities and organisations all working towards a greener, more sustainable Cornwall.

We also received the ‘Women and Girls in Sustainability: Global Perspectives’ award at the TVE (Television for the Environment) Global Sustainability Awards, at a glamorous event at BAFTA in London.

This was for our film about Cornwall’s energy future, Power to the People. Our food systems documentary, Hungry for Change, was also highly commended in the Greener Living category.

MEDIA COVERAGE AND SOCIAL MEDIA

The launch of #ClimateScam? – with the story of Jaz Njie, a young hairdresser, swapping her scissors for a microphone to investigate climate conspiracies – generated lots of media interest, with stories featured in the following:

We joined many other environmental and third sector organisations in deciding to leave Twitter/ X, due to the site’s lurch towards platforming unscientific climate denial and bullying and hateful speech towards climate scientists, activists and others.

In addition, we now have a Policy for Protection and Support when there are Painful Impacts of Online Behaviour to protect our team and film contributors.

PODCASTS AND BLOGS

Claire wrote a blog post for the Farm Carbon Toolkit, showcasing how FCT experts have helped with the food and land use angles of our films, as well as the power of film to change hearts and minds and inspiring climate action.

Our ongoing blog series, Cornwall’s Climate Catch-Ups, has continued throughout the year, featuring updates from contributors to our earlier films and others active in the local climate community. This approach keeps past stories relevant by sharing new developments.

This year’s contributors included: Emma Hazeldine (trail runner and Living on the Edge presenter), Jonathan Smith (organic farmer, Living on the Edge ), Josh Quick (forager, Hungry for Change presenter), Ruth Williams (marine conservation, Wildlife Trusts, Under the Surface ), Holly Astle (artist, climate activist, #ClimateScam? ) and Hannah Wilson (Marine Discovery co-owner).

Claire co-authored a blog post with Tim Jones from Community Energy Plus, addressing the misconception that renewable growth is responsible for high UK electricity bills, aiming to clarify the complex reality. It’s a seductive claim, frequented by those with a vested interest in blocking climate action.

Additionally, Claire was interviewed for podcasts including The Responsible Edge, Coffee with Conservationists, and Communities for Transformational Change (created by students at Exeter University Business School)

THE YEAR AHEAD...

As the team mainly work remotel ~~y,~~ we really value meeting in person! We are grateful to Dr. Sue Langford for hosting our annual retreat at Plymouth University’s Sustainability Hub, where we engaged in team-building activities and focused on our strategic priorities for the year and the charity’s long-term direction.

Each of our documentaries costs at least £1,000 per minute to complete – and each film is around 35-40 minutes. While this is very good value by industry standards, it’s a considerable amount of money – particularly in the current fundraising landscape.

We also have to cover overheads for our education work, fundraising, marketing and outreach, travel, events and charity administration, as well as equipment, insurance, accountancy, etc.

Until fresh funding is secured, we are consolidating and focusing our work after launching Beyond Bricks on the following areas:

Reaching new and broader audiences with our existing content (including repurposing this content).

Greater focus on supporting and promoting our workshops for schools and young people.

Strategic fundraising and partnerships

FINANCIAL SITUATION

Our opening balance on 1 October 2024 was £18,974.25 and our closing balance on 30 September 2025 stood at £27,736.93.

INCOME

Our total income over the financial year was £144,212.

This was made up of bequests, grants, donations, consultancy fees and Gift Aid, including:

£122,043 from the estate of a private individual who cared deeply about nature and the environment.

£4,500 to support our net zero intern, from the Entrepreneurial Futures Shared Prosperity Fund Project, funded by the Cornwall & Isles of Scilly Good Growth Fund.

£5,000 from Cornwall Wildlife Trust, for production and delivery of the report ‘Stronger and Deeper: Boosting Youth Nature Engagement in Cornwall

£7,446.77 from ticket sales and independent film screenings

£2,652.26 in donations (including £664 from schools)

£267.11 in Gift Aid

£1,102.97 in bank interest

EXPENDITURE

Our total expenditure for the year stood at £109,347.

The most highly-paid person within the organisation over the year was Claire Wallerstein, who works both as producer of the Cornwall’s Climate Stories series and also as charity director, being responsible for Cornwall Climate Care’s legal, administrative and public-facing activities.

Over the course of the financial year, Claire was paid a total of £32,737 (£19,642 for charity administration, £13,095 for film production).

2024-2025 was an exceptionally busy year for the charity in terms of film production and events.

All our charity staff are paid well above the minimum wage, while professional sub-contractors are paid in accordance with the Bectu union pay scale for audiovisual industry professionals.

All Cornwall Climate Care’s expenditure is made in accordance with a Financial Controls Policy agreed by the charity’s trustees.

We aim to raise the funds required for our work over the following year through a mix of grant funding as well as through supporter donations and crowd funding, commercial sponsorship, licence fees and ticket sales.

VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS

It is very important to us to recognise the huge amount of goodwill that we receive, in the form of time donated by our own trustees and community volunteers, as well as goods and services donated by fellow filmmakers and others to the Cornwall’s Climate Stories project.

This contribution is very significant, and without it we would not be able to deliver the work or events that we do. We are enormously grateful to everybody who supported us in this way during the 2024-2025 year.

We calculate the time voluntarily contributed to our work at £25/hour, as advised by the Heritage Lottery Fund, with expert contributions calculated at £35/hour. Unclaimed travel is calculated at our travel reimbursement rate of 45p/ mile.

One of the year’s most impressive voluntary efforts was by our lovely former social media manager Ellie Bearcroft and her partner Will Tapp, who undertook the gruelling task of walking a significant chunk of the South West coast path (mainly in pouring rain and a leaky tent!) to raise funds for Cornwall Climate Care.

Total goods and travel value: £660

Total time volunteered: 1,077.9 hours = £33,622.50 VALUE OF TOTAL VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS - £34,282.50

ACCOUNTANCY AND INDEPENDENT EXAMINER

A chartered accountancy firm, Wing Accountants, was employed to produce our accounts, which have subsequently been independently examined by Laurence Watkins.

We are grateful to Laurence for his assistance and also to Joanna Bennetts, Cornwall Climate Care’s bookkeeper.

ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

Cornwall Climate Care owns no property and has very few assets. The equipment used for filming and editing the documentaries belongs to the self-employed filmmakers.

However, a small number of physical assets that are essential specifically to the production of Cornwall’s Climate Stories have been bought using charity funds. These are predominantly hard drives used to store final film files and rushes – instead of incurring the expense (and carbon emissions) of storing these indefinitely online.

Cornwall Climate Care retains ownership of these assets. Should the charity be dissolved upon completion of its work, the trustees will arrange for the sale of any assets, based on their market value, or their further distribution to other charities working in the same field.

OUR OWN FOOTPRINT

We take our own impact very seriously, and abide by an e ~~n~~ vironmental policy to ensure that this is kept as low as possible, for example by storing only a minimal amount of mate ~~ri~~ al on the cloud and using only rechargeable batteries for filming and sound equipment.

We use public transport if possible (though this is difficult when travelling to remote locations with heavy filming equipment) and otherwise use an electric vehicle to travel to our film shoots and other events.

TRUSTEE DECLARATION

We, the trustees of Cornwall Clima ~~te~~ Care, he ~~re~~ by endorse this annual report and accounts for the year ended 30th September 2025 and confirm they comply with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011, having due regard to the guidance issued by the Charity Commission concerning public benefit.

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Alex Huke Louise Fox
15 / 12 / 2025 15 / 12 / 2025
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Harrison Wood Natalie Frey
15 / 12 / 2025 15 / 12 / 2025
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Cornwall Climate Care
1
Cornwall Climate Care
1
Cornwall Climate Care
1
191472 191472 CC16a
For the period
from
1st October 2024 To 30th September
2025
Section A Receipts and payments
A1 Receipts
Legacies
122,043
Donations, gifts and Crowdfunder
2,652
Film screenings and ticket sales
7,447
Gift Aid reimbursement
267
Other income
650
Bank interest
1,103
Grants
5,050
Consultancyfees
5,000
144,212
-
-
Sub total -
Total receipts 144,212
A3 Payments
Consultants and subcontractors
65,457
19,642
Payments to Director for film production
13,095
Website & marketing
8,353
Venue hire
245
General admin expenses
1,807
Legal & professional
318
Insurance
383
Printing& stationery
47
Donations
-
-
Sub total 109,347
-
-
Sub total -
Total payments 109,347
Net of receipts/(payments) 34,865
A5 Transfers between funds
-
A6 Cash funds last year end
32,535
Cash funds this year end 67,400
Unrestricted
funds
to the nearest £
Sub total(Gross income for AR)
A2 Asset and investment sales,
(see table).
Payments to Director for charity
administration
A4 Asset and investment
purchases, (see table)
to the nearest £
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Restricted
funds
to the nearest £
Endowment
funds
Total funds
to the nearest £
122,043
2,652
7,447
267
650
1,103
5,050
5,000
144,212
-
-
-
144,212
65,457
19,642
13,095
8,353
245
1,807
318
383
47
-
-
-
109,347
-
-
-
109,347
Last year
to the nearest £
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
122,043 100,000
2,652 23,317
7,447 11,715
267 2,964
650 313
1,103 560
5,050 -
5,000 -
144,212 138,869
-
-
-
- -
- -
- -
- 144,212 138,869
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
65,457 122,814
19,642 21,882
13,095 14,587
8,353 3,265
245 1,388
1,807 666
318 300
383 509
47 354
- -
- -
- -
109,347 165,765
-
-
-
- -
- -
- -
- 109,347 165,765
- -
-
-
-
34,865 - 26,896
- - -
- 32,535 59,431
- 67,400 # # 32,535

Section B Statement of assets and liabilities at the end of the period

Categories
B1 Cash funds
B2 Other monetary assets
B3 Investment assets
B5 Liabilities
B4 Assets retained for the
charity’s own use
Signed by one or two trustees on
behalf of all the trustees
Details
NatWest Account
Nationwide Deposit Account
Details
Details
Details
Details
Signature
Total cash funds
(agree balances with receipts and payments
account(s))
Restricted funds
to nearest £
to nearest £
27,737
-
39,663
-
-
-
67,400
-
OK
OK
Restricted funds
to nearest £
to nearest £
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Cost (optional)
-
-
-
-
-
Cost (optional)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Print Name
Unrestricted
funds
Unrestricted
Fund to which
asset belongs
Fund to which
asset belongs
Fund to which
liability relates
Amount due
(optional)
to nearest £
Endowment
funds
-
-
-
-
OK
to nearest £
Endowment
-
-
-
-
-
-
Current value
(optional)
-
-
-
-
-
Current value
(optional)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
When due
(optional)
Date of
approval

CHARITY COMMISSION. Independent examiner's report on the FOR ENGLAND AND WALES accounts S•¢lion A Independent Examiner's Report Report to th* trustee$l members of CORNWALL CLIMATE CARE On accounts for the year ended 30° September 2025 Charlty no lif any) 1191472 Set out on pages 1&2 I report to the truslees on my examination of the accounts of the above charity I'the Trust") for the year ended 3010912025. Responslbllltles and ba81$ of report As the chanty's trustees. you are responsible for Ihe preparation of th8 ac¢ounts in accordance wrth the requirements of the Charrlies Act 2011 1'th8 A¢t'). I report in respect of my examination of the Trust's accounts carried out under section 145 of the 2011 Act and in carrying out my examination, I have followed all ltte applicable Directions given by the Charity Commission under section 145{5){bl of the Act. Independent examiner'8 statementl have completed my examination I confimi that no material matters have come lo my attention in connection wth the examination which gives me cause to believe Ihat in. any material respect.. the accounting records ￿re not kept in accordance with section 130 of the Charities Act,. or the accounts did not accord with the accounting records,. or the accounts did nol comply with t￿ applicable requirements concerning the fom) and content of accounts sel out in the Charitiès (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 other than any requirement that the accounts give a 'true and fair, view which is not a matter considered as part of an independent examination. I have no concerns and have come across no other matters in connection with the examination to which attention should be drawn in this report in order to enable a Proper understanding of the accounts to be reached. Date: 16101126 Signed: Name: Lauren￿ Malcolm Watkins IER Oct 2018

Relevant professional quallflcallon(sl or body (if any): NIA Addres$: 2 Summerhill Terrace Millbr¢Jok, Torpoint Comwall Section B Disclosure Only complete rf the examiner needs lo highlight material matters of concern (see CC32, Independent examination of charity accounts.. dire¢tions and guidance for examiners). Glve here briel detalls of any items that the oxaminer wishes to dlsclose, IER Oct 2018